Stephanie (
flareonfury) wrote in
fandomcalendar2026-05-24 12:13 am
snickfic (
snickfic) wrote2026-05-22 08:09 pm
Entry tags:
it's been a great few weeks in Oasis land <3
+ Liam and Noel have been going to football matches together, along with various combinations of Liam's kids Gene and Lennon and Noel's kids Anais, Sonny, and Donovan. Liam and Noel's first time hanging out in public since like 2008?? Some great photos and short clips, but this one from last weekend has got to be the best. The full belly laugh, head thrown back! Noel trying ever more insistently to get his attention again because he wasn't finished yet!!
Bonus: Anais thinks her uncle is funny. ;__;
+ Speaking of the kids, here's how the comeback is going from their perspective:
( cut for image )
+ The reunion tour documentary has an official release date! And it's going to have JOINT INTERVIEWS, YOU GUYS. Liam and Noel in the same room, answering questions. Can you even fucking imagine. They haven't done one of those since 2005. Noel is going to laugh at all Liam's jokes and Liam is going to be SO SMUG about it. I'm going to see this IN A THEATER and I am going to dieeeeee.
+ Of course twitter asked Liam about this, and his response was:
He later said that the romance would be between "us and the fans," but we know the truth. :')
+ And finally, have this old clip I found of Liam at a gig singing I waited for a thousand years for you to come / and take me from behind.
Bonus: Anais thinks her uncle is funny. ;__;
+ Speaking of the kids, here's how the comeback is going from their perspective:
( cut for image )
+ The reunion tour documentary has an official release date! And it's going to have JOINT INTERVIEWS, YOU GUYS. Liam and Noel in the same room, answering questions. Can you even fucking imagine. They haven't done one of those since 2005. Noel is going to laugh at all Liam's jokes and Liam is going to be SO SMUG about it. I'm going to see this IN A THEATER and I am going to dieeeeee.
+ Of course twitter asked Liam about this, and his response was:
People asking me what the documentary's like it's a ROMANTIC COMEDY with a bit of ROCK N ROLL
He later said that the romance would be between "us and the fans," but we know the truth. :')
+ And finally, have this old clip I found of Liam at a gig singing I waited for a thousand years for you to come / and take me from behind.
snickfic (
snickfic) wrote2026-05-20 08:19 pm
Entry tags:
fandom stuff
- There are FOUR movies coming out this weekend that I am at last mildly interested in seeing, two probably only in theaters for a week. We'll see how many I manage to hit. The one I'd most like to support is Saccharine, a horror movie directed by an Australian woman, but it's also the one least convenient for me in terms of location/showtime. There are two other horror movies, Passenger and Corporate Retreat, and the new Boots Riley movie.
-
summerofhorrorexchange noms close tomorrow. My co-mod apologized that I've had to do most of the nom approvals this round, but honestly I'd felt like I was hogging them because I've so badly needed a fannish distraction. Anyway lots of good things in the tagset! Many new items on my read/watch lists! I can't wait to see what people request.
- So many nice Oasis tidbits from the last month and a half. I hope to compile them into a post here soon.
- I haven't written anything since I posted that Oasis fic a month and a half ago. I'm really hoping SoH gets my creative juices going again. I miss writing.
- Yesterday at Goodwill I found a whole stack of things, ranging from a DVD boxset of schlocky mid/late 00s horror to a SIGNED British hardcover edition of The Scar by China Mieville. For $4. Okay!!
-
- So many nice Oasis tidbits from the last month and a half. I hope to compile them into a post here soon.
- I haven't written anything since I posted that Oasis fic a month and a half ago. I'm really hoping SoH gets my creative juices going again. I miss writing.
- Yesterday at Goodwill I found a whole stack of things, ranging from a DVD boxset of schlocky mid/late 00s horror to a SIGNED British hardcover edition of The Scar by China Mieville. For $4. Okay!!
mrkinch (
mrkinch) wrote2026-05-20 05:55 pm
Entry tags:
5/20/2026 Loop Road and (a bit of) Laurel Canyon
Rather than get up at 4:15 to get to Inspiration Trail by dawn I stayed in bed with the cat, going up a little later to take Loop Road. It was a beautiful morning and nearly all the summer regulars put in an appearance. While I was leaning on the forked tree a little up Laurel Canyon (a convenient place to leave unneeded layers) I had very nice views of a male Allen's Hummingbird working the wild honeysuckle. I hadn't seen one well in several weeks. There was a Western Tanager heard from the usual area, multiple Western Warbling Vireos, and both larger flycatchers were very vocal. When I stopped at the top of the Little Farm on return I was able to get diagnostic views of several Violet-green Swallows, both their shiny green backs and their white faces, in part because they occasionally perch on fences rather than staying airborne at all times. But the biggest surprise was finding a Chipping Sparrow on the grass with the Dark-eyed Juncos. I didn't get a all around view of it so we'll see what the mods say, but there have been several in the area lately. ( The list: )
Before returning to the car I went down into Blue Gum picnic area and watched Chestnut-backed Chickadees, Bushtits, and Lesser Goldfinches in a large patch of hemlocks. So many tiny birds!
Before returning to the car I went down into Blue Gum picnic area and watched Chestnut-backed Chickadees, Bushtits, and Lesser Goldfinches in a large patch of hemlocks. So many tiny birds!
mrkinch (
mrkinch) wrote2026-05-18 01:16 pm
Entry tags:
5/18/2026 Lower Packrat Trail
It was warm and windy today, so relatively pleasant but terrifying in the long run. I had two, possibly three Downy Woodpeckers apparently chasing either other at the top of Lower Packrat. That was a treat. There were two or three nearly full-grown Mallard ducklings on Jewel Lake! By now they are too big for either the bullfrogs (which were cleared out last year but have unfortunately returned) or a passing Great Blue Heron. Other fun thing was a Western Wood-pewee at Jewel Lake. I don't expect them down in the Canyon. ( The list: )
The Swainson's Thrushes sang a few times this morning, first of the year for U and Chris. What thrilling song, the way it spirals upward, as though it's not going to end but just keep going higher and higher.
The Swainson's Thrushes sang a few times this morning, first of the year for U and Chris. What thrilling song, the way it spirals upward, as though it's not going to end but just keep going higher and higher.
summerofhorrorexchange (
summerofhorrorexchange) wrote in
fandomcalendar2026-05-18 01:04 pm
Entry tags:
snickfic (
snickfic) wrote2026-05-17 02:50 pm
Entry tags:
books: Patricia McKillip and Livia Llewellyn
In the Forests of Serre (2003) by Patricia McKillip. A tyrannical king of a magical forest engages his recently widowed son to the princess of a neighboring kingdom, whether either of those parties want it. The grieving widower son gets cursed by a Baba Yaga-esque witch. The princess tries her best to protect her kingdom, which happens to include a wizard recovering from a debilitating fight to the death with an ancient monster, which he got involved with because of the thoughtlessness a younger wizard whose aid he came to and who he sends off to protect the princess in her travels. The wizard is being tended by a scribe borrowed from the nearby monastary, who finds himself somewhat unwillingly devoted to the wizard, in all his foibles.
Maybe one of the reasons McKillip's books are famously kind of hard to remember is because there's so much going on in them, character-wise, and yet often relatively little plotwise. That is a lot of characters to pack into 300 pages, especially when the pace of the book is fairly slow and meditative. The actual events of this book are thin on the ground and mostly involve characters traveling or having conversations. Every so often we return to the kingdom of Dacre, where our scribe makes sure the enfeebled wizard is sleeping properly and getting enough to eat.
I've described McKillip's ouvre as what I wanted fairy tales to be like when I was a kid: beautiful, gossamer fantasies, with characters that felt like people. This one really nails that for me. We have some elements lifted directly from folk tails, like the witch Brum and the various quests the prince finds himself going on for talking animals he meets. We have the spectre of the monster, who even in death is casting a pall over those it touched in life. We have characters concerned for each others' health and well-being. We even have a very late, very casual reveal that complicates one of our villains in a way I didn't expect at all, even though maybe I should've.
Overall, a delightful time. Glad I finally got to this one in my McKillip reading.
--
Furnace (2016) by Livia Llewellyn. A collection of short stories, mostly horror or dark fantasy, some erotic, many with a surrealist bent.
I've been meaning to read more of Llewellyn's work after really liking her story "Omphalos" in a collection I read a few years ago, and since I've been on a roll reading short fiction lately, now is when I got around to it. In that review, I wrote, I'm not 100% sure what happens in it, but I don't care. The first half of that continued to be true through most of this collection, but unfortunately after a while I did start to care. I also found that her prose started to bother me after a while; I found a lot of it overheated and overwritten, using too much description to diminishing returns. Her occasional efforts in experimentation, such as the story entirely in lower case or the several stories in second person, also mostly did not work for me.
Llewellyn is definitely saying things around bodily agency, female sexuality, patriarchy, and also some things about toxic female familial relations, often mother-daughter ones. I can't say much of it resonated with me, unfortunately, but I do appreciate the centrality of the female perspective here.
I also really enjoy is that Llewellyn clearly has a relationship with the Pacific Northwest, and most of the stories with an identifiable real-world location are set there. I've never read a horror(?) story set in a Tacoma mall before or in the worker housing at the construction of the Grand Coulee Dam. The sense of regional specificity is really neat.
I did like a few stories okay out of the bunch:
"Cinereous." A woman with a menial job at an institute doing horrible human experiments is determined to show them she is worthy of greater involvement in the horrible experiments. A satisfyingly nasty little story with a suitably horrible ending.
"It Feels Better Biting Down." One of the most surrealist of the bunch, a story about codependent twin sisters who get everything they want, more or less. I just enjoyed the incestuousness vibes tbh. Also the body horror.
"Allocthon," the aforementioned story set in Bonneville construction housing, which is also a cosmic-flavored time loop story about a housewife whose prosaic dreams of a tropical vacation morph into an increasing desperation to see something on a mountainside that the time reset prevents her from seeing.
"The Last, Clean, Bright Summer." One of the most straightforward from a narrative perspective, a folk horror piece in the form of diary entries of a fourteen-year-old girl who finally gets to participate in the family reunion. I'm not sure what it says about me or Llewellyn that I often like her best when she's writing about underage rape, although unlike in "Omphalos," the rape here is very weird. I enjoyed the cosmic horror stuff, the weird biology, and the theme of alienation from one's parents (who in this case, it turns out, are literally not even her parents). Would pair really well with Attila Veres' story "The Black Maybe."
Maybe one of the reasons McKillip's books are famously kind of hard to remember is because there's so much going on in them, character-wise, and yet often relatively little plotwise. That is a lot of characters to pack into 300 pages, especially when the pace of the book is fairly slow and meditative. The actual events of this book are thin on the ground and mostly involve characters traveling or having conversations. Every so often we return to the kingdom of Dacre, where our scribe makes sure the enfeebled wizard is sleeping properly and getting enough to eat.
I've described McKillip's ouvre as what I wanted fairy tales to be like when I was a kid: beautiful, gossamer fantasies, with characters that felt like people. This one really nails that for me. We have some elements lifted directly from folk tails, like the witch Brum and the various quests the prince finds himself going on for talking animals he meets. We have the spectre of the monster, who even in death is casting a pall over those it touched in life. We have characters concerned for each others' health and well-being. We even have a very late, very casual reveal that complicates one of our villains in a way I didn't expect at all, even though maybe I should've.
Overall, a delightful time. Glad I finally got to this one in my McKillip reading.
--
Furnace (2016) by Livia Llewellyn. A collection of short stories, mostly horror or dark fantasy, some erotic, many with a surrealist bent.
I've been meaning to read more of Llewellyn's work after really liking her story "Omphalos" in a collection I read a few years ago, and since I've been on a roll reading short fiction lately, now is when I got around to it. In that review, I wrote, I'm not 100% sure what happens in it, but I don't care. The first half of that continued to be true through most of this collection, but unfortunately after a while I did start to care. I also found that her prose started to bother me after a while; I found a lot of it overheated and overwritten, using too much description to diminishing returns. Her occasional efforts in experimentation, such as the story entirely in lower case or the several stories in second person, also mostly did not work for me.
Llewellyn is definitely saying things around bodily agency, female sexuality, patriarchy, and also some things about toxic female familial relations, often mother-daughter ones. I can't say much of it resonated with me, unfortunately, but I do appreciate the centrality of the female perspective here.
I also really enjoy is that Llewellyn clearly has a relationship with the Pacific Northwest, and most of the stories with an identifiable real-world location are set there. I've never read a horror(?) story set in a Tacoma mall before or in the worker housing at the construction of the Grand Coulee Dam. The sense of regional specificity is really neat.
I did like a few stories okay out of the bunch:
"Cinereous." A woman with a menial job at an institute doing horrible human experiments is determined to show them she is worthy of greater involvement in the horrible experiments. A satisfyingly nasty little story with a suitably horrible ending.
"It Feels Better Biting Down." One of the most surrealist of the bunch, a story about codependent twin sisters who get everything they want, more or less. I just enjoyed the incestuousness vibes tbh. Also the body horror.
"Allocthon," the aforementioned story set in Bonneville construction housing, which is also a cosmic-flavored time loop story about a housewife whose prosaic dreams of a tropical vacation morph into an increasing desperation to see something on a mountainside that the time reset prevents her from seeing.
"The Last, Clean, Bright Summer." One of the most straightforward from a narrative perspective, a folk horror piece in the form of diary entries of a fourteen-year-old girl who finally gets to participate in the family reunion. I'm not sure what it says about me or Llewellyn that I often like her best when she's writing about underage rape, although unlike in "Omphalos," the rape here is very weird. I enjoyed the cosmic horror stuff, the weird biology, and the theme of alienation from one's parents (who in this case, it turns out, are literally not even her parents). Would pair really well with Attila Veres' story "The Black Maybe."
mrkinch (
mrkinch) wrote2026-05-15 05:36 pm
Entry tags:
5/15/2026 Inspiration Trail
Today was gorgeous! Clear all morning, no wind. I got up there quite early and heard an amazing dawn chorus. Very nearly all the locals were singing, although I didn't find Bushtits or the smaller Woodpeckers. (Interestingly, the European Starlings seem not to have stayed around. Yay?) I heard two Ash-throated Flycatchers and again there was a Bullock's Oriole singing. At the north end I walked down a ways for no particular reason, though not as far as the singing MacGillivray's Warbler as it's quite steep. Most fun was a little Warbler wave in the pines of the dip, at least one Hermit Warbler as well as a Townsend's. I know there were Northern Yellow Warblers around, but today I simply could not hear them. ( The list: )
There's been a marked lack of raptors recently. I'm fairly sure a Cooper's Hawk flew across the trail this morning, they are the only one I've seen or heard in weeks, but not sure enough.
There's been a marked lack of raptors recently. I'm fairly sure a Cooper's Hawk flew across the trail this morning, they are the only one I've seen or heard in weeks, but not sure enough.
snickfic (
snickfic) wrote2026-05-15 01:56 pm
Entry tags:
Fic recs: sports m/m
Heated Rivalry
i know where to draw the line by
magneticwave
Shane/Ilya, 62k. After a rough few years with San Francisco, Ilya signs with Hollander's Metros as a restricted free agent. A fun canon divergence AU, very funny, many lines so funny I had to DM to the friend who recced them to me. A few thousand words in I was like I have to find out who this author is, and of course it's magneticwave, who wrote some great Sid/Geno fic way back when. An all-round delight of a fic.
Formula 1 RPF
For about a week last year I was reading F1 RPF, and friends, it was like I'd been directly transported to hockey fandom circa 2015. Crunchy character dynamics, lots of porn written by adults, cracked out porn premises treated totally seriously. Somehow F1 is like twice as big as hockey RPF on AO3 now, despite having only really existed for about four years? Anyway here are my two favorites.
crash landers by
crescenteluce
Oscar Piastri/Carlos Sainz Jr, 58k. Carlos is so obviously an alpha that Oscar has never considered anything else until Carlos goes into heat. Classic omegaverse combined with classic pining of the kind where everywhere is just fundamentally unable to see past their own messy issues... until they finally do, and it's so satisfying. I cried a bunch of times reading this.
like milk from a baby by
higgsbosonblues
Lando Norris/Oscar Piastri, 5k. Sometimes Lando needs to lay eggs, and this time he's asked Oscar for help. YOU SEE WHAT I MEAN about 2015 hockey fandom!! If you too reminisce about weird xenobio kinkfic, this is for you.
i know where to draw the line by
Shane/Ilya, 62k. After a rough few years with San Francisco, Ilya signs with Hollander's Metros as a restricted free agent. A fun canon divergence AU, very funny, many lines so funny I had to DM to the friend who recced them to me. A few thousand words in I was like I have to find out who this author is, and of course it's magneticwave, who wrote some great Sid/Geno fic way back when. An all-round delight of a fic.
Formula 1 RPF
For about a week last year I was reading F1 RPF, and friends, it was like I'd been directly transported to hockey fandom circa 2015. Crunchy character dynamics, lots of porn written by adults, cracked out porn premises treated totally seriously. Somehow F1 is like twice as big as hockey RPF on AO3 now, despite having only really existed for about four years? Anyway here are my two favorites.
crash landers by
Oscar Piastri/Carlos Sainz Jr, 58k. Carlos is so obviously an alpha that Oscar has never considered anything else until Carlos goes into heat. Classic omegaverse combined with classic pining of the kind where everywhere is just fundamentally unable to see past their own messy issues... until they finally do, and it's so satisfying. I cried a bunch of times reading this.
like milk from a baby by
Lando Norris/Oscar Piastri, 5k. Sometimes Lando needs to lay eggs, and this time he's asked Oscar for help. YOU SEE WHAT I MEAN about 2015 hockey fandom!! If you too reminisce about weird xenobio kinkfic, this is for you.